html-proofer
toml-rs
html-proofer | toml-rs | |
---|---|---|
3 | 8 | |
1,551 | 1,034 | |
- | - | |
3.2 | 3.1 | |
9 days ago | over 1 year ago | |
Ruby | Rust | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
html-proofer
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Jekyll (GitHub Pages) but using Node for unit testing
Just because of Jekyll and a great tool html-proofer, we chose Ruby for all our local testing and some of our deployment tooling.
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Hey Rustaceans! Got an easy question? Ask here (16/2021)!
As this problem is not specific to Rust, I would use a general solution like html-proofer. If you're code is on github, you can use an Action job like this to check documentation links.
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Automate Simple Static Website Testing
Great. So now we know our JSON isn’t screwed up. We can make sure that all of the site HTML is well-formed as well. We’ll use a tool called htmlproofer which can check the integrity of the produced site. You can see everything it tests here on their repo. I run the command:
toml-rs
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`toml` vs `toml_edit` (ie `toml` 0.6 is out)
I updated the toml<->json online converter after the ValueAfterTable error has been fixed with toml 0.6. Very nice to see progress on the toml and toml_edit crates.
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Error trying to deserialize TOML using Rust/SERDE
use std::fs::File; use std::io::Write; use std::collections::BTreeMap as Map; use serde_derive::{Serialize, Deserialize}; #[derive(Debug)] #[derive(Serialize, Deserialize)] #[serde(tag = "type0")] enum FooBarTwo<'a> { FooBarOne { string1: &'a str }, } #[derive(Debug)] #[derive(Serialize, Deserialize)] #[serde(tag = "type1")] enum FooBarThree<'a> { FooBarFour { string2: &'a str }, } #[derive(Debug)] #[derive(Serialize, Deserialize)] struct FooBarFour<'a> { black: &'a str, #[serde(borrow)] green: FooBarTwo<'a>, #[serde(borrow)] blue: FooBarThree<'a>, } #[derive(Debug)] #[derive(Serialize, Deserialize)] struct FooBarFourList<'a> { // Uasing a Map to workaround a known bug (#303) when using top level Vec // see https://github.com/alexcrichton/toml-rs/issues/303 #[serde(borrow)] foo_bar_six: Map<&'a str, FooBarFour<'a>> } fn main() { let red = FooBarFour { black: "aaa", green: FooBarTwo::FooBarOne { string1: "aaaabbbb" }, blue: FooBarThree::FooBarFour { string2: "ccccccc" }, }; let pink = FooBarFour { black: "aaa", green: FooBarTwo::FooBarOne { string1: "aaaabbbb" }, blue: FooBarThree::FooBarFour { string2: "ccccccc" }, }; let mut white = Map::new(); white.insert("pink", pink); white.insert("red", red); let fbfl = FooBarFourList { foo_bar_six: white }; println!("\nTL: {:?}\n", fbfl); let filename = "./data/test.toml"; let data = toml::to_string(&fbfl).expect("Error serialising fbfl"); println!("\nTL as TOML: {:?}\n", data); let mut f = File::create(filename).expect("Unable to create file"); f.write_all(data.as_bytes()).expect("Error writing data to file"); let toml_in: FooBarFour = toml::from_str(&data).expect("Error deserialising fbfl"); println!("\n{:?}\n", toml_in); }
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Introduction to Rust generics [1/2]: Traits
This is especially useful for data deserialization: Just by implementing the Serialize and Deserialize traits from the serde crate, the (almost) universally used serialization library in the Rust world, we can then serialize and deserialize our types to a lot of data formats: JSON, YAML, TOML, BSON and so on...
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Hey Rustaceans! Got a question? Ask here! (21/2022)!
It looks like the fields are public now (https://github.com/alexcrichton/toml-rs/pull/455, https://docs.rs/toml/latest/toml/value/struct.Date.html), so just upgrading the crate should do it :-)
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anyone using rust in production? what do you do?
Pair that with Serde for serialization/deserialization (JSON, TOML, YAML, CSV/TSV, XML, URL query strings, etc.), Figment for configuration, and ignore for filesystem traversal with blacklist support, and Rust is a real joy for writing CLI utilities.
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toml_edit v0.3
Added toml-rs-compatible API via the toml_edit::easy module for when developers want to ensure consistency between format-preserving and general TOML work, with one caveat.
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Hey Rustaceans! Got an easy question? Ask here (16/2021)!
A quick example off the top of the head of my head is some tests in the toml package. It has a few different approaches. One is to use macros as in parser.rs. In valid.rs and invalid.rs it uses macros to generate a separate test for each input file. This allows you to run just one individual test from the list. These examples aren't perfect, and there are more sophisticated test utilities (like insta) that can abstract the process of "here are a bunch of inputs, test them all".
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Reading TOML with default values
I want to read a toml file with default value. I tried toml-rs but it doesn't allow for default values.
What are some alternatives?
HomeBrew - 🍺 The missing package manager for macOS (or Linux)
serde-yaml - Strongly typed YAML library for Rust
cargo-flamegraph - Easy flamegraphs for Rust projects and everything else, without Perl or pipes <3
Rustup - The Rust toolchain installer
toml - Rust TOML Parser
rust-analyzer - A Rust compiler front-end for IDEs
rust-esp32-std-demo - Rust on ESP32 STD demo app. A demo STD binary crate for the ESP32[XX] and ESP-IDF, which connects to WiFi, Ethernet, drives a small HTTP server and draws on a LED screen.
html-proofer-mailto_awesome - A custom html-proofer test that makes your mailto links awesome
rust - Empowering everyone to build reliable and efficient software.
hashbrown - Rust port of Google's SwissTable hash map
community-localization